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State Attorneys General Sue Obama Administration Over Birth Control Rule (Updated)

Evans Liberal Politics
February 25, 2012


The Best in Liberal Christian News
and US Politics

State Attorneys General Sue Obama Administration
Over Birth Control Rule (Updated)

State Attorneys General Sue Obama Administration Over Birth Control Rule, The Raw Story, February 23, 2012, by Eric W. Dolan, quoted verbatim, used with permission: Evans Liberal Politics is happy to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news, UPDATED, with poll results, below:

Seven state attorneys general have filed a lawsuit against the Obama administration that seeks to block the implementation of new federal government rules regarding contraception coverage.

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The attorneys general of Florida, Michigan, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Texas, along with some Catholic organizations, said in their lawsuit that the new rule violates the First Amendment.

In recent weeks, a controversy has erupted over the policy, which requires virtually all private insurance policies to cover family planning, including female contraceptives, essentially guaranteeing near universal access to birth control once all the provisions of the Affordable Care Act are implemented.

“Obamacare’s latest mandate tramples the First Amendment’s Freedom of Religion and compels people of faith to act contrary to their convictions,” said Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott. “The President’s so called ‘accommodation’ was nothing but a shell game: the mandate still requires religious organizations to subsidize and authorize conduct that conflicts with their religious principles.”

The White House offered to change the rules by exempting religion-related organizations with moral objections. Instead, the insurance companies would be required provide those services free of charge. Republicans have derided the compromise as an “accounting gimmick.”

The lawsuit alleges that the proposed compromise is too narrow because it does not exempt businesses and organizations that primarily serve or employ persons who do not share their religious tenets.

The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court of Nebraska.

According to a Quinnipiac University national poll released Thursday, 54 percent of Americans approve of Obama’s compromise concerning insurance coverage for birth control. Thirty-eight percent disapprove. Women are slightly more likely than men to approve of the compromise, while white Catholics are split 46 percent to 48 percent. Not surprisingly, Democrats are much more likely to approve of the compromise than Republicans.

Eric W. Dolan has served as an editor for Raw Story since August 2010, and is based out of San Diego, California. He grew up in the suburbs of Chicago and received a Bachelor of Science from Bradley University. Eric is also the publisher and editor of PsyPost. You can follow him on Twitter @ewdolan.

Also Watch Jon Stewart – The Daily Show: The Vagina Ideologues, February 14, 2012.

You Are Especially Encouraged to Read Rethinking the Abortion Debate from a Liberal Christian Perspective (Updated), Evans Liberal Politics, May 13, 2011, by Paul Evans.

UPDATE: See Contraception debate divides swing voters, according to new Gallup poll, The Ticket on Yahoo News, February 24, 2012, by Olivier Knox:

The fight over whether religious-based employers should provide birth control coverage as part of their health plans sharply divides Americans, six in ten of whom say they have been following the volatile debate on the issue, according to a new a href=”http://www.gallup.com/poll/152963/Contraception-Debate-Divides-Americans-Including-Women.aspx” target=”_blank”>Gallup poll.

Overall, 48 percent of Americans say they back religious leaders who object to extending such coverage against 45 percent who say they back President Barack Obama’s administration.

Believe what you will about Gallup’s numbers, but you owe it to yourselves to also see: Poll: Most back White House birth control rule, Politico, February 23, 2012, by MJ Lee:

A slim majority of Americans approve of President Barack Obama’s recent change to the administration’s rule that mandated religiously affiliated institutions offer free contraception coverage to their employees, according to a new poll Thursday.

More than half of American voters, 54 percent, said they approve of Obama’s plan to allow faith-affiliated employers to refrain from offering free birth control to employees while mandating that it be covered by insurers. Thirty-eight percent said they disapprove of the plan, a Quinnipiac survey found.

Paul Evans: Looking at these two poll results, given that both pollsters are usually reliable and unbiased, I would say there has to be a problem with the methodology in one or the other. Here are still two more polls you may want to take a look at on contraception:

See Support Is Found for Birth Control Coverage and Gay Unions, The New York Times, February 14, 2012, by Marjorie Connelly.

Recommended: In Polls, Obama Wins on Contraception Compromise, Catholics Hold Steady, The Daily Beast, February 19, 2012, by Douglas Schoen.

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Drones Set Sights on U.S. Skies

Evans Liberal Politics
February 17, 2012


The Best in Liberal Christian News
and US Politics

Drones Set Sights on U.S. Skies

The Information Society is Becoming
The Surveillance Society

Drones Set Sights on U.S. Skies, The NY Times, February 17, 2012, by Nick Wingfield and Somini Sengupta, excerpt quoted verbatim, with commentary by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans:

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WOODLAND HILLS, Calif. — Daniel Gárate’s career came crashing to earth a few weeks ago. That’s when the Los Angeles Police Department warned local real estate agents not to hire photographers like Mr. Gárate, who was helping sell luxury property by using a drone to shoot sumptuous aerial movies. Flying drones for commercial purposes, the police said, violated federal aviation rules.

“I was paying the bills with this,” said Mr. Gárate, who recently gave an unpaid demonstration of his drone in this Southern California suburb.

His career will soon get back on track. A new federal law, signed by the president on Tuesday, compels the Federal Aviation Administration to allow drones to be used for all sorts of commercial endeavors — from selling real estate and dusting crops, to monitoring oil spills and wildlife, even shooting Hollywood films. Local police and emergency services will also be freer to send up their own drones.

But while businesses, and drone manufacturers especially, are celebrating the opening of the skies to these unmanned aerial vehicles, the law raises new worries about how much detail the drones will capture about lives down below — and what will be done with that information. Safety concerns like midair collisions and property damage on the ground are also an issue.

American courts have generally permitted surveillance of private property from public airspace. But scholars of privacy law expect that the likely proliferation of drones will force Americans to re-examine how much surveillance they are comfortable with.….

Read the full article here.

Commentary by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: If I am not mistaken, 1984 was quite a few years ago. The FBI stores an untraceable, untouchable cookie on every computer that was ever connected to the internet. Microsoft has been collecting emails from Outlook Express and Outlook for quite a few years, sorting them by keywords. And with the Patriot Act starting in 2001, ALL Americans’ electronic communications (emails, internet surfing histories, cell phone calls, landline calls), are collected by NSA’s supercomputers. With NSA, certain keywords trigger human analysis.

That’s the way it is these days, the price we supposedly must pay for security. (Incidentally, did you know that Americans have more chance of drowning in a bathtub than they do of running into a terrorist?)

We’ve had radar on the highway and cameras at intersections for a number of years now. So added to all this, we will now have surveillance by drones. Private companies and corporations will be free to spy on us and gather all sorts of data, and cities and even smaller towns will have new, “added security tools.” Not to mention the federal government.

Brave New World, indeed.

What was that Mick Jagger said about being so happy he felt like running 20 red lights? Grosser bruder beobachtet dich!

Privacy In the News: See Google Secretly Tracked Apple’s Safari Users, WSJ Reports, The Huffington Post, February 17, 2012, by Ramona Emerson:

A Wall Street Journal report published Friday revealed that Google, along with several other companies, covertly tracked the online moves of users of Apple’s web browser Safari, in spite of the fact that the browser blocks such tracking by default.

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Daily Show with Jon Stewart: Lady and the Troops

Evans Liberal Politics
February 15, 2012


The Best in Liberal Christian News
and US Politics

Daily Show with Jon Stewart:
“Lady and the Troops”

"The Pentagon opens frontline combat positions
to women, but Rick Santorum worries over the effect
female troops will have on their male counterparts." (03:15)

Poll finds low enthusiasm for Republican candidates

Evans Liberal Politics
February 15, 2012


The Best in Liberal Christian News
and US Politics

Poll finds low enthusiasm for Republican candidates

Poll finds low enthusiasm for Republican candidates, The Raw Story, February 14, 2012, by Agence France-Presse, quoted verbatim, photo of Mitt Romney courtesy of Wikipedia courtesy of Gage Skidmore: Evans Liberal Politics is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news:

WASHINGTON — Most Republicans believe Mitt Romney will be their party’s presidential nominee and that he has the best chance to beat President Barack Obama in November, a national poll released Tuesday found.

Wikipedia photo of Mitt Romney by Gage Skidmore

But the CNN/ORC International poll found little enthusiasm for the former Massachusetts governor’s presidential bid, instead favoring Christian conservative Rick Santorum over Romney, 34 to 32 percent.

The poll findings underscored Romney’s failure to ignite his base weeks into a primary season that has seen one candidate after another surge to challenge his de facto frontrunner status, and then lose steam.

Santorum is the latest to be lifted by a sudden wave of support that has taken him to the front of the Republican field in national polls.

The poll showed that Santorum had the strongest support of all the candidates among Republicans over 50, college graduates, strong Tea Party supporters, self-described conservatives and men.

But women preferred Romney by a 38 to 29 percent margin over Santorum, who has drawn fire in the past week over a 2005 book that scoffed at the “radical” feminist view that men and women should have equal opportunity to rise to top jobs in the workplace.

And when it came to which candidate was most likely to win the nomination or had the best shot at beating Obama, Romney won hands down.

Sixty-eight percent of those polled said Romney would most likely get the nomination, a 29-point jump from when the same question was asked about a month earlier.

That compared to 13 percent for Santorum, 11 percent for former House speaker Newt Gingrich, and five percent for Texas congressman Ron Paul.

Fifty-five percent of those surveyed said Romney had the best chance to beat Obama, well ahead of Santorum at 18 percent, Gingrich at 14 percent and Paul at seven percent.

But only nine percent said they were “very satisfied” with the field of candidates, and 44 percent said they were either “not very satisfied” or “not satisfied at all,” almost as many as say they were “fairly satisfied.”

In Romney’s case, 21 percent said they would enthusiastically support his candidacy if he were the nominee, while another 44 percent said they would be “pleased but not enthusiastic.” Another 35 percent would be either “displeased” or “upset.”

Santorum fared only somewhat better with 32 percent saying they would welcome his nomination with enthusiasm; 37 percent would be “pleased but not enthusiastic;” 21 percent would be “displeased but not upset;” and 10 percent would be upset.

The poll was conducted February 10-13 among 478 registered Republicans and had a margin of error of plus or minus 4.5 percent.

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Santorum Upsets G.O.P. Race With Three Victories (UPDATED)

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Santorum Upsets G.O.P. Race
With Three Victories
(UPDATED)

Taken From: Santorum Upsets G.O.P. Race With Three Victories, The NY Times, February 8, 2012, by Jim Rutenberg, and Santorum comes in first in Missouri, Minnesota and Colorado GOP primary races, The Raw Story, February 8, 2011, by Megan Charpentier, excerpts quoted verbatim, with commentary by Paul Evans and Updates below:

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NY Times:

His candidacy all but dismissed just days ago, Rick Santorum won the Minnesota and Colorado caucuses and a nonbinding primary in Missouri on Tuesday, an unexpected trifecta that raised fresh questions about Mitt Romney’s ability to corral conservative support.

His performance added another twist to an unruly nominating contest that has seen Republican voters veering among candidates and refusing to coalesce behind anyone. It came after Mr. Romney scored back-to-back victories in Florida and Nevada that had led to predictions that he was finally on a straight march to the nomination.

The triple result amounted to a stinging denial of Mr. Romney’s candidacy from three states where Republicanism is defined by the evangelicals and Tea Party adherents he has struggled to court this year.

Raw Story:

Santorum spoke in Missouri after the race in Minnesota was called for him, thanking God “for our ability to persevere through the dog days,” his wife (whom he kissed on stage), his kids, his supporters whose votes, he said, “I suspect were heard particularly loudly in Massachusetts,” and the tea partiers who he claimed were the “base of the conservative movement.” Santorum then turned to attacking Obama who, he said, he suspected wasn’t listening because, “Has he ever listened to the voice of the American people?” Santorum went on to say that “he thinks he’s better than you,” a refrain he repeated throughout his speech. He promised, too, that Romney had “the same positions as Obama” on everything from cap and trade to the Wall Street bailouts.

Santorum picked up a theme from his competitor, Gingrich, adding that “Tonight we have an example of what a race looks like when a candidate isn’t outspent 5 to 1 and isn’t subject to negative ads that attack his character,” adding that Romney won’t be able to outspend and out-organize Obama in the fall. And, he added, his campaign was doing well because of his economic plan which he said proved that, “I don’t care about the 99 percent, rich or poor, I care about 100 percent of Americans.” Santorum then turned to the oft-heard complaint from conservatives about the Obama administration’s decision to force religious employers to provide contraceptive coverage to their employees, saying, “When the government gives you rights, unlike when God gives you rights, the government can take you away,” accusing the Administration of actively discriminating against Catholics. — see below:

Paul Evans:
Right Santorum, Obama is going to set out to deliberately alienate a huge block of voters with his strong stance on contraceptives, like that makes sense? Obama did it because a woman’s right to do with her body what she wishes, including prevent pregnancy, is something he believes in, in other words, he did it on principle. I strongly believe that the vast majority of American women would agree with him.

From my own experience talking with many hundreds of people while canvassing for votes in elections, it appears to me that it is Protestant fundamentalists and evangelicals who often take prejudicial positions about Catholic beliefs and the Catholic Church. I have heard some pretty hardened beliefs and positions about this, and sometimes downright bigotry. I do apologize to the vast body of Protestant believers who of course have no such prejudice. I want to add, for those who are not aware of it, that I am an ardent Christian myself, although I have had this doubted or discounted to my face. We should honor our Christian differences in belief, while striving to understand and minimize those differences. Santorum’s statement about Obama’s position in re the Catholic Church was inflammatory, let us hope not deliberately so, but politics is politics.

Moreover, as I suspected, it is the Roman Catholic church hierarchy rather than the Catholic believers themselves who are against contraception. See More Catholics support contraception coverage than other Americans, The Raw Story, February 7, 2012, by David Edwards.

A survey released by the Public Religion Research Institute on Tuesday found that 58 percent of Catholics think businesses should be required to provide health plans with free birth control, compared with 55 percent of all Americans who agreed with the requirement. At 38 percent, white evangelical protestants were the least likely to agree free contraception should be provided by employers.

And so, lo and behold, it is the lead head honcho right wing evangelical candidate who is falsely leading or egging on the presses wrong-headed coverage of this issue. Most Americans agree with the requirement of birth control coverage, just not most white evangelical Protestants. So probably, for Santorum, it is mainly a calculated appeal to his base. However I guess Santorum doesn’t know the statistics. He probably thinks the majority of Americans agree with his radical, Dominionist right wing evangelical positions. They don’t. And that’s why if a man like Santorum, or Ron Paul for that matter, were to get the nomination for the G.O.P., it would basically guarantee an Obama reelection. It would also probably harden the divisions under which our society now labors, and would be a bad thing for America.

How far will evangelicals go in their hysteria over matters of reproductive health? See Dem state senator adds ‘Every sperm is sacred’ clause to ‘personhood’ bill, The Raw Story, February 7, 2012, by David Ferguson. The really amazing thing, to me, is that rather than considering the matter and others like it in any sort of philosophical or rational terms — far from that — these people actually believe these sorts of positions are obvious to any Christian, if not every American. This Democratic state senator is basically competing with Republicans for popularity in a conservative state? No, quite possibly she actually believes firmly in her position. If you look up the history of belief about sperm, eggs and reproduction, it was in ancient Israel that the position was adhered to that all the vitality of a human being rested in the sperm, with the woman basically serving as an incubator. So I guess it may well say something about this in the Old Testament, about which I am not knowledgeable (in these matters). But can Americans not understand that this is an ancient position thoroughly discredited by modern science? ~ Paul Evans

UPDATE: See Senate Democrats Say Obama ‘Reinforced’ His Stance on Contraception Mandate at Democratic Retreat, ABC News The Note, February 8, 2012, by Sunlen Miller:

Following President Obama’s speech at the retreat, a small group of Senate Democrats, mostly women, left the retreat early in order to hold a news conference on Capitol Hill to counter the Republicans’ news conference today at which they called for the mandate to be overturned.

Democrats said they will “fight strongly” to keep the mandate in place.

“It is our clear understanding from the administration that the president believes as we do, and the vast majority of the American women should have access to birth control,” Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said pointing out that 15 percent of women use birth control for medical issues. “It’s medicine, and women deserve their medicine.”

Democrats today called on Republicans to stop using women as a “political football,” and stop defining this debate, as Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., did earlier in the day, as a religious issue.

“It’s time to tell Republicans ‘mind your own business,’” said Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J. ”Ideology should never be used to block women from getting the care they need to lead healthier lives.

“The power to decide whether or not to use contraception lies with a woman – not her boss,” said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y. “What is more intrusive than trying to allow an employer to make medical decisions for someone who works for them?”

Paul Evans: I think right wing ideology, ie the Republicans, are reaching too far on this one. In order to pass legislation, any bill has to get past the conservative group of Senate Democrats known as “blue dog” Democrats. While these several Senators would in fact be likely to go along with legislation limiting abortion, it is my feeling that they will turn a deaf ear on Republican appeals to support legislation limiting a woman’s right to contraception.

UPDATE: See Armed with 3 victories, Santorum goes on attack, The Salt Lake Tribune, February 8, 2012, by Catalina Camia and Susan Page.

Fresh from his three-state sweep, a confident Rick Santorum said he is prepared for an onslaught from Mitt Romney as he tries to make his case that he’s the best conservative to take on President Obama.

Santorum, speaking to CNN Wednesday morning, derided Romney for trying to portray himself as a Washington outsider and for repeatedly talking about his credentials as a former CEO.

The former Pennsylvania senator stressed that Romney’s stands on health care, “cap and trade” legislation and government bailouts are the wrong positions for a GOP nominee.

“Mr. Private Sector was Mr. Big Government when he was out there running for the private sector,” Santorum told CNN.

In a separate interview with CNN, Romney adviser Stuart Stevens said Romney’s campaign will be tougher in making contrasts with Santorum. The goal will be to paint Santorum, a former two-term senator, as a Washington insider.

Paul Evans: I am in no way certain that this is the right approach for Romney. Both men have held high positions as far as most Americans are concerned. Romney will be hitting Santorum as an insider while Santorum will be attacking Romney for past positions, in other words, on his record. It just seems to me that, as radical as the so-called reforms are which Mr. Santorum proposes, Romney primarily needs to attack Santorum’s positions. It seems obvious to me that Santorum’s radiical positions are wrong for America, and I think Romney could make that point very clearly if he just concentrated on it.

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Prop. 8 overturned in California, court says state can’t ban gay marriage

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Prop. 8 overturned in California,
court says state can’t ban gay marriage

Prop. 8 overturned in California, court says state can’t ban gay marriage, The Lookout on Yahoo News, February 7, 2012, by Liz Goodwin:

The 9th Circuit Court in California struck down as unconstitutional the state’s voter-passed ban on gay marriage Tuesday, ruling 2-1 that it violates the rights of gay Californians.

[View a slideshow of demonstrations around Prop. 8 here]

“Proposition 8 serves no purpose, and has no effect, other than to lessen the status and human dignity of gays and lesbians in California, and to officially reclassify their relationships and families as inferior to those of opposite-sex couples,” Judge Stephen Reinhardt wrote in the decision. The court concludes that the law violates the 14th Amendment rights of gay couples to equal protection under the law. Access to gay marriage will remain on hold pending appeals to the decision.

Visit MarriageEqualityUSA. Here at Logos57: A Caring Community, we maintain a strong faith in God yet have liberal values. One of the most cherished of American rights is the right to equality under the law. It is for that reason that we support the LGBT community in it’s fight for that full equality. It is for each person to stand justified or condemned before God, not constrained in rights by man’s laws. Laws which condemn some citizens to a lesser status under whatever reasoning are thus invalid under the 14th Amendment.

We have always maintained that our society’s liberalism, to the extent it exists, has no inherent conflict with God’s wishes for man. I do apologize to anyone I thus offend. Do you not think that those American citizens who are for whatever reasons denied their basic rights do not find laws such as Proposition 8 very offensive? We should consider ALL Americans’ right to equality under the law, not just those who believe the way we do. ~ Paul Evans

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Mitt Romney wins the Nevada caucus by a wide margin

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February 5, 2012

 

Mitt Romney wins the Nevada caucus by a wide margin

Mitt Romney wins the Nevada caucus by a wide margin, The Raw Story, February 4, 2012, by Megan Carpentier, copied verbatim: Logos57: A Caring Community is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news, Image via Gage Skidmore on Flickr, Creative Commons licensed:

Former governor Mitt Romney (R-MA) scored his most decisive win to date in the Nevada Republican caucus tonight, winning the race by more than 15 percent and leaving former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA) and Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) to battle for second place again with former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA) again a distant fourth.

Creative Commons photograph of Mitt Romney on the campaign trail in Nevada by Gage Skidmore

But despite Paul’s expectation that the caucus format would benefit his campaign, Paul looked to place a significant distance behind Gingrich.

Romney took the stage just before 10:40 ET, introduced again by his wife, Ann, to thank supporters and slam Obama, reminding voters that Obama encouraged people to avoid coming to Nevada for conventions and meetings. Romney then took aim at Friday’s encouraging unemployment statistics, suggesting that the “real” unemployment rate was closer to 15 percent, a nod to the underemployment rate, which is down from 17.2 percent in January 2010.

In what is now a frequent refrain, Romney told his audience, “This president began his presidency by apologizing for America, now he should apologize to America” adding that the president should stop making excuses for the ongoing economic crisis. “Our vision for the future could not be more different from his,” Romney said, promising to cut government, reduce the government’s share of the total economy and balance the federal budget without raising taxes. In another statement common to his speeches, Romney said that Obama “demonizes and denigrates” entrepreneurs that his Administration would promote. And, of course, he promised to repeal “Obamacare” and rescind the recent Obama Administration ruling that forces employer insurance to provide coverage for birth control, which has been under fire from religious employers and religious groups — a point Romney made in his Tuesday night speech after the Florida primary. He then asked people to remember that their ancestors came to American “for the pursuit of happiness, not the pursuit of hand-outs,” and asked them to vote for him in November, making this one of his shortest speeches to date.

Gingrich took his small, press conference stage at the Venetian alone at 11:17 ET, promising the assembled reporters to go to Republican National Convention in Tampa in August as a candidate for President to honor his donors. He then slammed Romney for his comments earlier this week about the poor, saying that he wanted to “turn the social safety net into a trampoline.” He then followed it by saying that he thought indexing the minimum wage to inflation was a terrible idea which would “kill jobs and stop access for young people.” Following that, he called Romney a “Massachusetts moderate” that didn’t represent the views of the GOP.

He then said, “Tonight he will probably do reasonably well, this is a heaving Mormon state,” ignoring the fact that the race had already been called for Romney and indicating that he didn’t yet know whether he or Paul had taken second place. He said he expected to be “at parity” with Romney after the Texas primary on April 4, almost a month after Super Tuesday.

In more odd answers, Gingrich called Romney a “Soros-backed” candidate and dismissed reports that his largest backer, Sheldon Adelson — whose money reportedly paid for the anti-Romney documentary that solidified his win in South Carolina — would eventually back Romney after Gingrich backed out. Adelson, Romney said, was solely interested in a nuclear Iran and its existential threat to Israel and Adelson’s statements about Romney as unimportant.

“I’m not going to defend the outcome in a state where I was outspent 5-to-1,” Gingrich told another reporter when he was asked whether it was possible that voters just weren’t “buying what you’re selling.” Gingrich stated that “I don’t think the American people will support a campaign that suppresses turn-out,” he said, and stated that he expected to be atop Gallup polls again by April. But despite saying that he didn’t like negative campaigning and felt he did better while the campaign was positive, Gingrich refused to “unilaterally disarm” and stop his negative campaigning against Romney. Instead, he promised to bring “new tactics” to the next debate with Romney to counter what Gingrich termed his blatant lies.

[This post was updated after results came in.]

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Megan Carpentier is the executive editor of Raw Story. She previously served as an associate editor at Talking Points Memo; the editor of news and politics at Air America; an editor at Jezebel.com; and an associate editor at Wonkette. Her published works include pieces for the Washington Post, the Washington Independent, Ms Magazine, RH Reality Check, the Women’s Media Center, On the Issues, the New York Press, Bitch and Women’s eNews.

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